PPIAF

Study of Systems

of Private Participation

in Public Transport

London

June 2005

Prepared by : Brendan Finn

Table 1 : Basic Data

City /

London

Area / London
Country / England, UK
Transport Authority / Greater London Authority
Agency Name / Transport for London
URL / www.tfl.gov.uk
Area of coverage / Greater London area
Population
(urban)
(suburban) / 7,388,000
Area
(urban)
(suburban) / Central London 27 sq. km.
Rest of Inner London 294 sq. km.
Outer London 1,259 sq. km.
All Greater London 1,579 sq. km.
Procurement basis / Open competitive tendering on route or route lot basis for standard 5-year contracts on gross-cost basis with quality incentives
Transport modes / Bus, underground, commuter rail, LRT


Table 2 : Political Framework and History of Reform

City / London
General Political contest
Nature of national political system
Hierarchy of Authorities / Central Government establishes national Transport policy and establishes the legal framework.
Greater London Authority (GLA) is the statutory municipal authority for the Greater London area. The next layer is the Borough, of which there are 33 in the Greater London Area. Each Borough has its own local authority.
The Mayor is directly elected. The GLA is governed by the London Assembly, to which 25 members are elected at the same time as the Mayor. 14 of these are elected from constituencies, and a further 11 from a London-wide list.
Allocation of powers among jurisdictions / In the rest of the UK, transport authorities have no power over commercial services. They are the authority for services which, under limited circumstances, they procure under contract.
The Greater London area is an exception, having been exempted from the deregulation of the industry under the 1985 Transport Act. Although there have been quite significant changes to the structure of the local authority and the transport authority (e.g. being brought under central government control from 1984-99), the fundamental position of a central transport authority for the Greater London area with exclusive regulatory powers has not been altered.
Authorities of adjoining jurisdictions must co-operate for cross-border services. In practice, Transport for London is the dominant entity.
Primary level of transport authority / The GLA has vested its transport authority in Transport for London (TfL). TfL is responsible for ensuring that an effective public transport service is available, maintained and developed throughout the Greater London area.
Structure of the Transport Authority / • Transport for London is responsible to a Board chaired by the Mayor of London, with 13 Board Members and 2 special advisers.
• The key strategic direction is taken from the Mayor’s Transport Strategy and the Mayor’s London Plan.
• Responsibilities include: Buses, Underground, light rail, taxis, TfL Road Network, river piers.
• TfLCarries out strategic development, prepares major infrastructure projects and ensures co-ordination and leadership of schemes with other transport providers.
• TfL funds transport work by London local authorities.
Participating entities / The boroughs of the Greater London area.
Funding sources / In 2003-4, the Government, the GLA and 3rd Parties (including PPPs) contributed GBP 2,831 million. Passenger fares, Street Management services, and other services contributed GBP 2,321 million.
Entitlement to concessionary travel is authorised by the Boroughs, and they are levied for the associated costs.
History of Reform
Previous systems / When London's urban public transport was brought together in 1933 under the auspices of the London Passenger Transport Board (LPTB), the bus services covered a vast area consisting not only of what is now Greater London but also much of the adjacent counties. Within Greater London, the bus route network was complemented by tram and trolleybus systems. The trams were finally withdrawn in 1952 and the trolleybuses a decade later in 1962, with bus replacements in each case.
From 1970 to 1984, London Transport was under the direct control of the Greater London Council, and the area for which LT was legally responsible contracted to the present 1 580 square km (610 square miles). A few bus and Underground services continued into outlying areas beyond the Greater London boundary to maintain well-established links.
Phasing of replacement / Transport Authority and regulatory framework Perspective
Under the London Regional Transport Act 1984, London Transport was again brought under central Government control. The Act required LT to set up subsidiary companies to run the buses and the Underground, and also stipulated that competitive tendering should be introduced where appropriate to ensure that LT operated economically and required less financial assistance from public funds for the day to day running of its services.
In 1985, bus services outside London were deregulated which meant that any licensed operator could apply to run a new route even if another company already ran a service along the same roads. London was however specifically exempted but it was intended that, once bus services in London had become less dependent on Government subsidy and steps had been taken to encourage greater competition between the operators, deregulation should be extended to the Capital as well.
The subsidiary company set up in 1985 by London Transport to run the bus services was known as London Buses Limited (LBL). However, route planning and the level of fares charged remained LT responsibilities.
In the same year LT set up the Tendered Bus Division to begin the process of the competitive tendering of its bus routes, under which LBL was required to compete against operators in the private sector for the opportunity to run individual bus routes on behalf of LT. The routes were awarded to the operator which could run the best service at the most cost-effective price, and several of the initial routes went to private companies rather than to LBL. Buses again began to appear on London's streets whose livery was not traditional LT red.
LBL initially faced several problems resulting from higher overheads, which made it difficult to compete with the private operators. As a step towards the planned deregulation of bus services in London, LBL therefore created thirteen locally based subsidiary companies, each with its own commercial remit.
These companies conducted their own wages negotiations with the unions, took appropriate steps to reduce their overheads, and competed against each other as well as against the private sector companies for the contracts to run LT bus routes. The subsidiaries became increasingly successful in competing for routes.
In December 1992, the (then) Conservative Government announced that the LBL companies would be sold into the private sector ahead of deregulation. However, a year later, the Government decided to postpone deregulation until after the General Election which took place in May 1997.
Public Sector Bus Company Perspective
In Autumn 1984, the London Regional Transport Act changed the framework under which London Transport (LT) was to provide bus services in the capital. The Act also advocated a tendering regime by empowering LT to invite private operators to submit tenders to carry out services as specified in an ‘Invitation to Tender’. In 1985, LT set up London Buses Ltd (LBL) as a separate, wholly owned public sector bus operation and it also set up the Tendered Bus Division of LT, which began the process of competitively tendering bus services. Subsequently in 1988, LBL divided up its bus operations into 12 operating companies in preparation for their future privatisation.
Initially, competition for bus routes was between private bus operators and the LBL operating companies. The initial contracts were developed on a gross cost basis. That is, the operators were paid the full operating cost of the services and LT retained the fares revenue.
The competitive procurement of bus services and use of independent operators gradually increased between 1985 and 1994 and the new LBL operating companies had to adapt to a more commercial environment with the effect that costs were driven down and productivity increased.
In 1994, the subsidiary companies of London Buses Ltd were privatised and by January 1995, 11 London Transport owned companies had been successfully sold; four as management buy-outs and seven sold to private companies. (One had been disbanded.) At the time of privatisation the subsidiary companies held both gross cost contracts won by tender and their remaining routes not yet tendered; the latter were on a net cost basis. (The net difference between the operating cost and the estimated revenue was paid by LT to the company or, where revenue exceeded cost, from the company to LT.)
By 1995, half the London bus network had been tendered and was being operated under contract. Contracts had been won in roughly equal proportions by independent operators and LBL companies. By August 2000, all routes had been successfully tendered and are now operating under contract to London Buses (LB).
Key motivations / Compliance with national legislation
Cost reductions and greater efficiency in services supported by public funds
As with the other PTA’s in the UK, it can reasonably be stated that the reform was not what the Greater London Council would have chosen themselves. Further, the abolition of the GLC was done for quite overt political reasons that extended far beyond the transportation domain. The motivations for the changes rest primarily with the ideology and political position of the Conservative administration, although it must be acknowledged that various academics and economists strongly recommended such an approach.
Main changes in original reform / Abolition of GLC and transfer of control to Central Government
Restructuring of the new local authority and transport authority
Introduction of competitive tendering
Restructuring of London Buses
Privatisation of London Buses
Subsequent changes / Transport for London (TfL) was established following the 1999 Greater London Authority Act. London Buses is the subsidiary company of TfL responsible for securing bus services. There has been little effective change in the processes for procurement of the bus passenger transport, but there is a very substantial shift in the general policy and priority for buses. This has included radical changes to the fares structures, the ticketing and information systems, the investment levels in buses and the volume of services, priority within traffic, and promotion of public transport.
The main change within the tendering process has been the move away from net cost contracts which had been preferred for a period of time in the mid-/late-1990’s. The approach is now one of gross-cost contracts with quality incentives.
Any major problems that stimulated changes / The restructuring of London Transport to Transport for London was stimulated by broader transport and local governance policies, and the need to establish transportation systems which could keep London moving efficiently.
The specific bus-related concerns were :
•Many actions were being led by lowest cost rather than by transportation effectiveness or impact on the city
•Ageing bus fleet.
•Level of bus service not operated due to staffing reasons had reached 2% and was rising
•Inadequate wages and inadequate supervision.
•Poor public image.
The shift away from net cost was mostly stimulated by the belief that it was not offering any financial benefits relative to gross costs contracts. There may also have been elements of difficulties to safely forecast revenues, thus leaving the operator with a choice of carrying the risk or pricing it into the bid; of difficulties to satisfactorily measure it from TfL’s viewpoint; and the loss of knowledge for TfL where the operator retains the revenue and the fundamental knowledge of the business.

Table 3 : Legal and Institutional Framework

City / London
Legal Framework
Applicable legislation for :
-  Transportation
-  Market Entry
-  Competition
-  Route licencing
-  Institutional framework
-  Funding
-  Operator licencing
-  Vehicle/driver licencing / The basic regulation for passenger transport is the UK Transport Act 1985, although a number of other instruments also are influential. The Transport Act of 2000 makes some amendments, but is not material to the fundamental practice.
Transport for London is a statutory body created by the Greater London Authority Act (GLA) 1999. S. 141 (1) of the GLA gives the Mayor of London a general duty to develop and implement policies to promote and encourage safe, integrated, efficient and economic transport facilities and services to, from and within London.
S. 154 (3) (b) states that TfL has a duty to facilitate the discharge by the Greater London Authority of the duties under s. 141 (1). In turn, TfL has a power under s.173 to provide or secure the provision of public passenger transport services, to, from or within Greater London. TfL also has certain other miscellaneous powers and duties.
TfL is also the highway authority for Greater London Authority (GLA) roads and is also a traffic authority for GLA roads. As a traffic authority TfL regulates the way in which the public uses highways. TfL is responsible for traffic signs, traffic control systems, road safety and traffic reduction. In addition TfL is the licensing authority for both hackney carriages (taxis) and for private hire vehicles (minicabs).
The GLA sets down TfL's powers and duties. In general, TfL has a discretion as to who may discharge those functions on its behalf. However, in the case of certain specified activities, that discretion is limited. Those activities specified by the Transport for London (Specified Activities) Order 2000 must be carried on by TfL through a company limited by shares (which may be a subsidiary of TfL). Transport Trading Limited (TTL) is TfL's trading body. It has a number of subsidiaries:
-  London Underground Limited
-  London Bus Services Limited
-  London Buses Limited
-  Victoria Coach Station Limited
-  London River Services Limited
-  Dockland Light Rail Limited.
All TfL functions remain with the TfL Board unless delegated. The TfL Board may arrange for its functions to be discharged on its behalf by any TfL committees and sub-committee, any TfL subsidiaries, any TfL members or officers and any bodies of members or / and officers. The TfL Standing Orders lays down the decision-making structure and proceedings and the scheme of delegation.
The Public Passenger Vehicles Act 1981.
Institutional Framework
Listing of all relevant agencies / Greater London Authority
Transport for London
London Bus Service Ltd. is the subsidiary that plans and procures the bus services.